Comment No, thanks. (Score 1) 124
I'm good with Star Wars (1977), its prequel Rogue One (2016), and the latter's prequel TV series Andor (2022-2205).
I'm good with Star Wars (1977), its prequel Rogue One (2016), and the latter's prequel TV series Andor (2022-2205).
I've already switched back to Linux. I'm done paying twice the price for mediocre hardware.
Sure, the Mac experience can be nice, but it's not *that* nice.
I'm getting away from Mac, too, having run exclusively them since Mac OS X 10.1 was released. Before that, I ran Linux, and recently I've begun the process of transferring back. I recently built myself a nice 8th-gen i5 system and loaded Manjaro Linux on it. Life's good!
I'll never, ever pay to watch commercials.
If you must have commercials in your content, make it free to stream.
If you must ask me to pay for your content, don't put commercials in it.
This is non-negotiable. I will do without rather than pay for commercials.
I'm blocking all HTTPS traffic. I don't trust it. What are they trying to hide?
To me, it's sci-fi in the sense that the premise is that a scientist, decades ago, made multiple clones of someone. And also that, today, there is at least one group which can do custom gene splicing in adults to merge species' characteristics. That sort of thing.
One more for the sci-fi that's out right now: Orphan Black. I've been enjoying that one.
(As for Continuum, I thought it got much better after season 1. Too bad it's been cancelled, but at least they were given enough notice that they could plan the last season around that fact.)
The idea of making changes incrementally is a good one. It reminds me of the advice I heard from someone who was able to retire in his early 50s. He quickly learned that, when people he meets ask him what he does for a living, he shouldn't say "I'm retired." People get jealous, react negatively, etc. So he started telling people he's taking a sabbatical, and that's worked much better for him.
Ah, I see. I couldn't quite tell based on what he'd written. Thanks for the clarification!
Are you aware that Steve Jackson designs tabletop games, not computer games?
Sounds like you want to own what you buy.
What are you, some kind of socialist?
My Atari 800 home computer is my longest-lasting, hardest-working electronics device. It was built like a tank (the metal shielding alone weighs several pounds).
Other than that, I suppose my alarm clock. I've had it since 1988 and it just keeps going. Nothing fancy - LED display, just a clock with alarm, no radio functionality or anything like that.
What a shame. A missed opportunity if there ever was one.
I go on working for the same reason a hen goes on laying eggs. -- H.L. Mencken